Seqanswers Leaderboard Ad

Collapse

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Reference guided assembly

    Hi,

    What are some of the tools for reference guided assembly? I am trying to assemble a Eukaryotic genome around 800-1000MB in length. There is a closely related species genome available (about 70% of Illumina 100 bp reads from this genome align to the related species). I do not have a large RAM machine to do a true de novo assembly (my machine is about 24GB RAM). I have about 50x coverage from Illumina and SOLiD paired-end reads. MOSAIK seems to be one tool that claims to do this but I found zero citations to the MOSAIK publication for assembly.

  • #2
    I'm going through the process of trying to figure this out right now as well. I'm working with a prokaryotic genome that is 15 - 20% variable from the available reference genomes. I've looked at MOSAIK several times and have come to the conclusion that it's a problem of word-usage. The program is referred to alternatingly in its own documentation as an aligner and an assembler, but functionally it still only aligns to reference like bwa or novoalign and their ilk. The options for true hybrid reference-guided assembly seem to be EXTREMELY limited. There's Velvet's Columbus module, which I've worked with a bit. I'm also in the middle of trying to work through the method outlined in Schneeberger et al's paper which seems like it may have potential to successfully combine the benefits of alignment and assembly, but is a really long multi-step manual process and relies on some older tools (AMOScmp, for example). I'm about halfway through a work-through, so I can't tell you whether it's any better than pure de-novo or Velvet Columbus yet, but take a look and see whether it has the potential to help you.

    Comment


    • #3
      Hi,

      I was wondering if you've had any results from trying out both Velvet Columbus and the method from the paper? I'm looking to do some reference-based assembly and so would be nice to have this rough benchmarking information at hand.

      Thanks!

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by StopCodon View Post
        Hi,

        What are some of the tools for reference guided assembly? I am trying to assemble a Eukaryotic genome around 800-1000MB in length. There is a closely related species genome available (about 70% of Illumina 100 bp reads from this genome align to the related species). I do not have a large RAM machine to do a true de novo assembly (my machine is about 24GB RAM). I have about 50x coverage from Illumina and SOLiD paired-end reads. MOSAIK seems to be one tool that claims to do this but I found zero citations to the MOSAIK publication for assembly.
        Why not try Tophat/cufflinks pipeline for assembling transcripts based on your reference. I am currently doing that with good results

        Comment


        • #5
          Hi upendra_35,

          Any suggestions for genome assemblies? Not transcripts?

          thx

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by mht View Post
            Hi upendra_35,

            Any suggestions for genome assemblies? Not transcripts?

            thx
            Hi, Newbler performs reference-guided assembly. I ran it from the command line. It is runMapper option.

            Hope this helps

            Comment

            Latest Articles

            Collapse

            • seqadmin
              Essential Discoveries and Tools in Epitranscriptomics
              by seqadmin


              The field of epigenetics has traditionally concentrated more on DNA and how changes like methylation and phosphorylation of histones impact gene expression and regulation. However, our increased understanding of RNA modifications and their importance in cellular processes has led to a rise in epitranscriptomics research. “Epitranscriptomics brings together the concepts of epigenetics and gene expression,” explained Adrien Leger, PhD, Principal Research Scientist on Modified Bases...
              Yesterday, 07:01 AM
            • seqadmin
              Current Approaches to Protein Sequencing
              by seqadmin


              Proteins are often described as the workhorses of the cell, and identifying their sequences is key to understanding their role in biological processes and disease. Currently, the most common technique used to determine protein sequences is mass spectrometry. While still a valuable tool, mass spectrometry faces several limitations and requires a highly experienced scientist familiar with the equipment to operate it. Additionally, other proteomic methods, like affinity assays, are constrained...
              04-04-2024, 04:25 PM

            ad_right_rmr

            Collapse

            News

            Collapse

            Topics Statistics Last Post
            Started by seqadmin, 04-11-2024, 12:08 PM
            0 responses
            39 views
            0 likes
            Last Post seqadmin  
            Started by seqadmin, 04-10-2024, 10:19 PM
            0 responses
            41 views
            0 likes
            Last Post seqadmin  
            Started by seqadmin, 04-10-2024, 09:21 AM
            0 responses
            35 views
            0 likes
            Last Post seqadmin  
            Started by seqadmin, 04-04-2024, 09:00 AM
            0 responses
            55 views
            0 likes
            Last Post seqadmin  
            Working...
            X